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Across Campus: Cooking 101

Posted on Sep 8, 2000

Andy Wolfe hovers over a cooking omelet, waving a spatula at a circle of students standing in his kitchen.

“Who knows how you make your eggs fluffy?” asks Wolfe, a civil engineer who usually quizzes students on stress loads of bridges. “Anybody?”

“Add milk?” one timidly offers.

“Try water,” Wolfe says. “It took me 28 years to learn that, but it really works.”
And so it went twice a week this summer for a dozen students who took “Cooking with the Wolfes,” a course designed to get even the most diehard macaroni and cheese eaters to expand their culinary horizons.

The idea came to Wolfe when he was asking students what they usually had to eat. Predictably, selections leaned toward the fast and easy – pasta, hot dogs and the ubiquitous pizza delivery.

“We wanted to show students that for just about the same money and very little time, they can prepare some really great meals,” says Wolfe, who with his wife, Lisa, are frequent hosts to Union students at their nearby Adams Road home. “This is not gourmet cooking. It's home style. This is the kind of cooking that could impress a date … or parents.”

The course was largely underwritten by the College's Intellectual Enrichment Grant. Students paid only $7 for the entire course.

“We both come from families that like to cook,” Wolfe said. “The big Thanksgiving, the big Christmas, family reunions. We just like to cook, and we like to cook for crowds.”

Most of the students who signed up for the class knew their way around a kitchen. Three seniors – Jenny Comerford, Paula Denema and Dan Bamford – took a cooking class last spring on a term abroad in Italy. “I came here to the Wolfes to get some new ideas,” said senior Rebecca Terry. “I'm not a very creative cook.”

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Convocation Starts College’s 206th Year

Posted on Sep 8, 2000

President Roger Hull welcomed first-year students to “a community that builds character” in his address at the opening convocation on Tuesday.

“An education at Union is a social activity, a community activity,” he said. “A college is a place where people can communicate with each other through ideas, through facts and through emotional experiences.”

Hull spoke of 19th-century French philosopher Alexis de Toqueville. “For Toqueville, the true genius of American democracy was revealed in the way Americans founded voluntary associations that harnessed American individualism for service to society,” Hull said.

But those associations – including colleges – have lost some of their ability to rein in individualistic impulse, Hull noted. “Americans too often are a collection of narrow special interests with little tolerance for compromise and less allegiance to anything approaching a concern for the common good.”

Hull also spoke of the challenge of substantially changing the social, residential and academic character of the College, adding, “I trust that … the rule of civility will prevail and the level of our discourse will be raised while the volume of our voices will not be.”

Hull concluded, “We must continue our journey toward true community while celebrating the autonomy and individuality of each member of the student body, faculty and staff.”

Also at convocation, Peter D. Heinegg, professor of English, received the Stillman Prize for excellence in teaching. Dean of Faculty Christina Sorum, quoted student nominations, one of which read, “Professor Heinegg's classroom is one of intellectual engagement and excitement. It's like getting a drink from a fire hose.” 
Pratikshya Bohra '03 received the Phi Beta Kappa prize for excellence among first-year students in General Education. Christopher D. Roblee '02 was honorable mention.

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Calendar

Posted on Sep 8, 2000

Complete Campus Events
Calendar

Friday,
Sept. 8, through Monday, Sept. 11, 8 and 10 p.m.


Reamer Auditorium.

Film: Gladiator.

Friday,
Sept. 8, 8 p.m.


Round Lake Auditorium.

Union College Jazz Ensemble, Prof. Tim Olsen director, performs jazz standards
and original compositions and arrangements.

Monday,
Sept. 11, 12:30 p.m.


Reamer Auditorium.

General faculty meeting.

Thursday, Sept. 14, 7:30 p.m.


Nott Memorial.

“Designing a Masterpiece: Symposium on the Engineering and Construction
of the Erie Canal”
with F. Daniel Larkin, interim provost and vice
president for academic affairs, SUNY Oneonta; Frank Griggs, director of historic
bridge programs at Clough Harbour & Associates LLP; Andrew Wolfe, assistant
professor of civil engineering; and participating students from Union College
and Schenectady High School (co-sponsored by the Division of Engineering).

Friday, Sept. 15, through Monday, Sept. 18, 8 and 10 p.m.


Reamer Auditorium.

Film: Road Trip.

Through
Oct. 29.


Nott Memorial.

Exhibit: “Monument of Progress: The 175th Anniversary of the Erie
Canal”
with related events throughout.

(A
full schedule of events appears in “Union's Calendar,” distributed
weekly on campus.)

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Erie Canal Celebration Opens at Nott

Posted on Sep 8, 2000

Nearly two centuries ago, a visionary no less than Thomas Jefferson rejected as
“madness” the proposal for a canal that would link New York City and
the Great Lakes.

But
New York State forged ahead in a massive undertaking that critics labeled
“Clinton's Ditch” after the state's governor, DeWitt Clinton. Within
years, the project had not only paid for itself, but had become one of the most
successful transportation projects in history, transforming the state and nation
economically.

The
project was the Erie Canal. Through Oct. 29, Union College will celebrate the
Erie Canal's 175th birthday with the Nott Memorial exhibit titled “A
Monument of Progress: The 175th Anniversary of the Erie Canal.” A
concurrent exhibit takes place at the Schenectady Museum.

The
exhibit opened Thursday with an evening of canal songs and interpretations by
singer George Ward '60.

The
next event is Thursday, Sept. 14, at 7:30 p.m.: “Designing a Masterpiece:
Symposium on the Engineering and Construction of the Erie Canal” with F.
Daniel Larkin, Interim Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, SUNY
Oneonta; Frank Griggs, Director of Historic Bridge Programs at Clough Harbour
& Associates LLP; Andrew Wolfe, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering,
Union College and participating students from Union College and Schenectady High
School (co-sponsored by the Division of Engineering).

The
exhibit features among its 122 items 30 original drawings never before shown.
Produced by draftsmen and engineers who worked on the original canal or its 1835
and 1862 enlargements, the drawings from the New York State Archives consist of
panoramic color survey maps embellished with perspective drawings as well as
mechanical renderings of the engineering marvels that made the canal possible.
Also in the exhibit are oil paintings, watercolors, engravings, etchings,
stoneware, artifacts, models of locks and other canal features, even a
tombstone.

Making
it Work in the first-floor Dyson Hall features four models built by Union
faculty and students as well as Schenectady High School students. Models are of
a lock, aqueduct, and two bridges. Corresponding original structural drawings
from the New York State Archives accompany the models.

Recollections
and Reflections in the Nott's second-floor Mandeville Gallery features 19th
century paintings, prints, drawings, and artifacts re-creating the entire trip
along the canal. The state Archives' original maps of the canal route will be on
display. Exhibit visitors will be able to walk the length of the canal within
the exhibit itself.

Bankwatch
– Views of the Erie Canal (through Oct. 29) will appear in the Schenectady
Museum, showcasing selections from the acclaimed collection of the Canal Society
of New York.

“The Erie Canal was not only a triumph of engineering over
geography, but a triumph of vision and courage over narrowness and doubt,”
said Clifford Brown, political science professor and chair of the Mandeville
Gallery Committee. “It is fitting that the oldest college in the region,
which has many connections to the canal and its history, celebrate this
important anniversary.”

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Don’t Forget About the 5th Annual FOUA Golf Classic

Posted on Sep 6, 2000

DON'T FORGET about the 5th Annual FOUA Golf Classic, which will be held on
Friday, September 29 at the Eagle Crest Country Club in Clifton Park.

Schedule of events:
Registration–11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Buffet Lunch–11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Shotgun Start (4 person scramble): 12:30 p.m.
Cast Bar & Reception: 5:30 to 6:00 p.m.
Buffet Dinner & Awards: 6:00 p.m.

REGISTRATION DEADLINE IS SEPTEMBER 15—SO HURRY!!

$125.00 complete package including cart
$100.00 lunch & golf only
$ 50.00 buffet dinner only
(donations are also greatly appreciated)

All proceeds benefit Union College Athletics

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